Musicslu Model for Pre-Selling Webcomics?

Musicslu is a website that provides a handy solution for pre-selling an album of music.  It’s nothing magic — get a bunch of fans to pre-commit to a certain amount of cash and once that number is reached everyone pays in.  Artist makes some income, fans get new stuff, nasty pirate type issues avoided.

At first it struck me that this site might provide a model to make it easier for more comic creators to pre-sell books based on their comics but as I noodled over it I wonder if this kind of approach might be a way to make it more feasible to sell webcomics over the web.  Here’s how it could work.  First – this doesn’t replace the values of free webcomics — you couldn’t pursue this approach without already having webcomics out there for free (with the possible exception for those artists already famous).  But if you wanted to start a second project online this might be the way to see if there’s sufficient interest from your fans to devote the time to it.

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State of Things

Johnanna Draper Carlson asks "When did Girlamatic die?" — and creator Tara Tallan replies "Girlamatic isn’t quite dead… there are several comics that still update (mostly) weekly, such as Gypsy!, Faery Underground, Five Star, and also mine, Galaxion."

It does seem fairly clear though that Joey Manley (aka ComicSpace Inc) has largely given up on the original webcomics anthology model, even though four such sites remain in various stages of operation: Modern Tales, girlamatic.com, Graphic Smash and serializer.net.

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Clickwheel Revamp

Last week Clickwheel had a relaunch and a website revamp.  A big part of the new design is "the dashboard" which does seem to make it easier to read and create comics.  It also looks like they’ve incorporated the comics-creation site ComicBrush into Clickwheel.  I am charging up my iPod and I hope to look around the site more this week and maybe offer more detailed thoughts but for now it looks pretty slick.

The press release follows after the jump:

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Update on Kazu Kibuishi

Good year so far for Kazu Kibuishi – his graphic novel Amulet got nominated for an Eisner award (very good book and tween-teen appropriate); Amulet 2 is apparently past the proofs stage now – not sure of its publication date though; Flight 6, the anthology series he edits is coming this year as well (and features a new Daisy Kutter story from Kibuishi); and best of all: a new Copper comic out this week.

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The Meteor Represents the Internet and the Frightened Ant Underneath Represents the Newspaper Editorial Comic

One of my handy "Google Alerts" alerted me to the end of Filibuster, an editorial-style webcomic by J.J. McCullough that has been running since 2001.  McCullough writes that largely due to the low readership (he writes that he has 2000 regular readers based on Google Analytics) he is putting the comic on indefinite hiatusFilibuster was a largely traditional editorial style comic that took shots at all sides and tried to play off of current events.  McCullough may not be as talented as the best practioners of this form but he surely was a competent creator who produced over 1000 comics on a regular weekly basis.  In fact, back in 2003 ComixTalk ran a fairly positive review of even his earliest work.

I think this story is one more anecdote suggesting that editorial cartooning in the very traditional sense is simply not going to cross-over to the web in a successful way.  (That may not be the case for the newer breed of opinionated cartoonists who largely come out of the alternative weekly newspaper tradition)  There are probably lots of reasons for that – cartooning is a pretty inefficent way to deliver topical news and information amongst all the other mediums available today.  These comics don’t typically have story or any of the other pleasures of narrative work.  Many of them work in a tradition of taking shots at all political stripes — a tradition bred of the 20th century newspaper’s self-image of non-partisanship.  That probably works against them in the medium of the web.  Iin fact McCullough notes the greater success of the straight right-wing Cox & Forkum comic than his work, although I recall that Cox & Forkum went on hiatus even earlier – back in 2007 (we also reviewed Cox & Forkum back in 2003). 

And perhaps most fundamentally this specific kind of comic that comes from the editorial pages of the newspaper isn’t smart enough for the Internet age.  This is clearly my opinion and its dangerous to cast it so wide, but I can’t recall a comic of this type that really provided my with insight or struck an emotional chord in the way that many other types of comics can and often do.  Since survival and success on the Internet seems to be dependent on building a passionate fan base I can’t see how comics of this sort can make the jump.

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Lea Hernandez Relaunchs Rumble Girls

Lea is on my list of people I've been trying to interview — it's going to happen sometime this year, but for now life has kept her pretty busy (see her LJ for many details).  Her latest news is the the re-boot/re-launch of Rumble Girls on a subscription basis.  Since she's aiming for 300 fans to subscribe maybe it's best to look at this as more of a hybrid fundraising drive/subscription than the straight ahead sub models once employed by Modern Tales, etc.  

Click here for more details – RUMBLE GIRLS: Runaway Lightning Ohmry Subscriptions & Re-Launch.

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Awards for Comics: Consider the Reubens

This topic comes up from time to time and maybe it’s as good an excuse as any to ponder it again.  Unlike movies (OSCAR) or music (GRAMMY) there is no one clear-cut top award for the medium in the United States.  It seems to be largely because of the fractured history of different distribution models for comics in the US.  In any event the Eisners (largely thought of as awards for comic books) have included webcomics as a category in their program — should the Reubens (largely thought of as awards for comic strips in newspapers) do so as well?  That and other drama-filled topics inhabit the latest long comment thread at DailyCartoonist (Odd side note: a recent regular participant over there – Scott Kurtz of PvP – claims to have been banned).

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